Iron King

Iron King

1972
Iron King
Iron King

Iron King

7.6 | en | Action & Adventure

Iron King is a tokusatsu superhero TV series about a giant cyborg. The series was produced by Nippon Gendai and Senkosha, and aired on Tokyo Broadcasting System from October 8, 1972 to April 8, 1973, with a total of 26 episodes.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
EP26  The Great Tokyo War
Apr. 08,1973
The Great Tokyo War

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EP25  Iron King in a Panic!
Jan. 01,0001
Iron King in a Panic!

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EP24  Tokyo Assault Frontline Base
Jan. 01,0001
Tokyo Assault Frontline Base

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EP23  The Insect Humanoid Masquerades as a Woman
Jan. 01,0001
The Insect Humanoid Masquerades as a Woman

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EP22  Terrifying Titanian Underworld
Jan. 01,0001
Terrifying Titanian Underworld

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EP21  Kama Guras Wants Lethal Gas!
Jan. 01,0001
Kama Guras Wants Lethal Gas!

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EP20  The Titanians Strike Back
Jan. 01,0001
The Titanians Strike Back

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EP19  The Giant Bug Kabutoron Appears
Jan. 01,0001
The Giant Bug Kabutoron Appears

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EP18  Monster Robot Annihilation
Jan. 01,0001
Monster Robot Annihilation

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EP17  The Order to Assassinate Iron King
Jan. 01,0001
The Order to Assassinate Iron King

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EP16  Destroy Tora-Girasu!
Jan. 01,0001
Destroy Tora-Girasu!

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EP15  Marathon Monster Capri-Gon
Jan. 01,0001
Marathon Monster Capri-Gon

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EP14  Attacking the Underground Fortress
Jan. 01,0001
Attacking the Underground Fortress

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EP13  Attacking the Underground Fortress
Jan. 01,0001
Attacking the Underground Fortress

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EP12  State of Emergency in Tokyo
Jan. 01,0001
State of Emergency in Tokyo

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EP11  Tokyo Is Burning
Jan. 01,0001
Tokyo Is Burning

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EP10  A Kiss for the Dead
Jan. 01,0001
A Kiss for the Dead

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EP9  Gentaro in a Close Shave
Jan. 01,0001
Gentaro in a Close Shave

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EP8  The Shadow Area
Jan. 01,0001
The Shadow Area

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EP7  Those That Fly the Skies
Jan. 01,0001
Those That Fly the Skies

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EP6  Lullaby for a Warrior
Jan. 01,0001
Lullaby for a Warrior

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EP5  The Duel in the Autumn Wind
Jan. 01,0001
The Duel in the Autumn Wind

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EP4  Gentaro Travels Alone
Jan. 01,0001
Gentaro Travels Alone

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EP3  The Warrior's Smile
Jan. 01,0001
The Warrior's Smile

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EP2  The Swan in the Ruins
Jan. 01,0001
The Swan in the Ruins

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EP1  Secret Messenger of the Morning Wind
Oct. 08,1972
Secret Messenger of the Morning Wind

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7.6 | en | Action & Adventure , Sci-Fi | More Info
Released: 1972-10-08 | Released Producted By: Senkosha , Nippon Gendai Country: Japan Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Iron King is a tokusatsu superhero TV series about a giant cyborg. The series was produced by Nippon Gendai and Senkosha, and aired on Tokyo Broadcasting System from October 8, 1972 to April 8, 1973, with a total of 26 episodes.

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Stream Online

The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Mitsuo Hamada , Shôji Ishibashi

Director

Shunsuke Kikuchi

Producted By

Senkosha , Nippon Gendai

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Cast

Reviews

pokemonmasternikki Iron King is one of those tokusatsu shows that are just underrated, but I really do like it. So, as many know, this show has Gentaro Shizuka, a cowboyish dude with a whip, and Goro Kirishima, the guy who is Iron King. Iron King, the hero of the show, is nothing really special. Just a giant Ultraman-esque guy who runs on water. I do have a favoring for him, though. He just is a very interesting hero and it is probably one of the coolest toku heroes out there. For the first 10 episodes, they fight the Shiranui Clan. The guys in the clan have these black helmets (some you could see their full face the others you just see their eyes) and these apron like thingies that are black for the normal ones, white for the commanders, and gold for the leader. The monsters that they bring out are very human-like robots. Goro and Gentaro fight the Phantom Militia from episodes 11-18. They look very Arabian and have different colored bodysuits. They bring out saurian monsters. Finally, from 19-26, they fight the Titanians. They are white faced aliens with fedoras and capes on and are just pure nightmare fuel. They send out insectoid monsters. Anyways, this show is very enjoyable, and it has a good amount of drama, comedy, and sci-fi all mixed into one! I'm not going to spoil this amazing show for you, so go and buy the DVD and watch this awesome show for yourself!
crossbow0106 This was a Japanese TV show about two guys who fight over 26 episodes three separate and distinct factions that want to take over everything. This is really for teens, so I am not the target audience, so the review is based on that. The two guys are kind of immature, again something that would appeal more to teens. Women in this series do not fare well, most of them end up dying or ignored. The special effects are, at times, pretty bad in that buildings are obvious toy models. Okay, but here are some good things: In the good versus evil category, the series teaches trust, resolve and friendship. The Iron King of the title is a giant superhero, conjured up when Gentaro needs someone to help him in his attempts to thwart the enemy. Those sequences are fun. If you watched this as a child/teen then, you'd smile, especially realizing how advanced special effects have become. Adults can skip this, its pretty much a young person's show. My review of 6 is mixed. Kids up to 16 or so may rate this higher.
The Illuminated Lantern A Japanese superhero program that ran for 26 episodes from 1972-73. Similar to ULTRAMAN, each episode featured a guest giant monster that must be defeated by the heroic Iron King. Sounds tiresome, but the format is redeemed in the details: The hero, Gentaro Shizuka (Shoji Ishibashi) does not become the giant Iron King, instead, his goofy sidekick Goro Kirishima (Mitsuo Hamada) does. And not only that, Iron King doesn't defeat the giant monster all by himself: usually Gentaro must come along, and using only his "Iron Belt", which transforms into a very long whip or a sword, and a handful of grenades, Gentaro must finish off the monster himself, in action set-pieces that defy all known laws of physics and have terrible problems with scale. But the leads are such fun that it is hard not to be swept along with the show.The 26 episode series is basically broken into three stories, or three groups of villains that Gentaro and Goro must face. First up is the Shiranui Clan, who control giant robots and want to conquer Japane as "revenge against the Yamato Clan", to whom they feel a "2,000 year old hatred." Heady stuff for a kids show, the bad guys are basically terrorists, and in some episodes a relative of one of the villains tries to plead for them to leave the evil group, and come back to their family, with predictably dire consequences.The second batch of villains is perhaps a bit less serious, the Phantom Militia, who wear primary-colored outfits topped by white Bedouin head scarves. They are still mad terrorists, though. They control a group of not just robots but monster-robots, making the giant battles a whole lot more interesting. The third and final batch of bad guys are the Titanians, a group of aliens from outer space who dress like Zorro and wear white face masks. Come to think of it, a bit of V FOR VENDETTA, really. According to the comprehensive and interesting liner notes included in the DVD set, compiled by the ever-reliable and authoritative August Ragone, the show switched to aliens because the kiddies were getting a bit confused about the villains being altogether too human. Not sure if that helps, though, because the aliens immediately start "body-jacking" innocent villagers, women, and children, and fighting Gentaro and Goro while in those human forms.Too bad that Japanese children's programming from the 70's is not exactly what you might call politically correct. Sometimes, Gentaro is a complete bastard. He ignores people in peril to focus on defeating the main villains, puts people in danger as bait to draw the bad guys in, and generally lacks compassion - maybe just outwardly, but still. In one episode, he kisses a nun just so she would leave them alone. Goro acts as his conscience, though, and the two strike a good balance.Still, in an era when Sesame Street releases old episodes of its TV show but labels them inappropriate for kids today, and Whoopie Goldberg provides a disclaimer at the front of Looney Tunes boxed sets to warn that a few of the cartoons may have inappropriate stereotypes, a little more warning of the politically incorrect bits would have been nice. The worst moment was in episode 12, when Gentaro finally takes a little break from his adventures -- previously he and Goro were always out in the woods, camping, living off the land, and fighting the bad guys. He is depressed, and next thing you know he is sitting at a hotel bar swigging some booze and smoking up a storm. I could hear an audible gasp from the chair next to mine -- and the wheels turning, trying to reconcile the hero with this new vice. (At least, he doesn't start smoking again until episode 24). Parents watching with their kids who are not interested in promoting an interest in smoking might wish to skip those episodes. If you would rather avoid bad language, that's much harder, as outbursts of "Bastards!" and "Damn it!" are quite common, but I thought relatively harmless.Parents may also want to be prepared for the introduction of the Titanians at the end of Episode 18. They say nothing, they just laugh, in their immobile white masks, then suddenly their shadows stretch out and grow into the sky. In other words -- pure nightmare candy. I still remember a dream I had when I was six years old about shadows very similar to those cast by the Titanians in that moment. Watch it early in the day, perhaps, or follow up right away with the next episode, which largely de-mystifies the Titanians and makes them just another bad guy group in need to of a good smack-down.Despite these flaws, IRON KING is great fun and compares quite favorably with the classic original ULTRAMAN. In IRON KINGs favor, the two leads are really great, and I'm a sucker for regular human beings fighting against giant monsters, which I find much more interesting than the monster vs. robot wrestling matches almost every episode of every Japanese superhero series eventually devolves to. In ULTRAMANs favor, each episode has a unique self-contained story. I understand that IRON KING is more the norm in this respect, but I do find it a bit tedious when episode 1 features 10 bad guys, and the leader says, "Bad Guy #1, go!!!!", and next episode, they face #2, and so on through 10 episodes. Happily, the stories get increasingly complex in IRON KING as the series progresses.
Aaron1375 I used to see these Japanese shows when I was young. You know the type, evil doers send giant monsters on the attack and some guy has the power to turn into a giant robot or something and fights them. So when I saw a bunch of series like that at Wal-Mart I figured I would buy them seeing as how they were relatively cheap for complete collections of shows. I also got one called "Super Robot Red Baron" and one I have heard of quite often "Ultraman". Well I watched this one first and I did not get quite what I was expecting from reading about the show on the back of the box. Instead of the usual, it was quite different. The show follows Gentaro and Goro as they are always after these bad guys who through most of the series used giant robots and later turned into space insects. Gentaro was the lead guy often fighting the giant beings himself. Goro would later turn into Iron King and proceed to hold off the enemy until Gentaro defeated the dude with the remote. Other times, Iron King would simply get his butt kicked by the bad guys. I think he finally got to take out his first bad guy in episode 16 as he for some reason gained more power and was able to shoot lasers he never did in the first episodes. The show was interesting as it had these two guys walking the countryside trying to find the bad guys, first some strange guys in helmets called I believe the Shuruni clan. They used giant robots that looked like the bad guys off a Mega Man game. Then they took on the Phantom Militia who used giant robot dinosaurs that at some points sounded like air being let out of a balloon. Then finally they fought the Titanias an alien race that wore capes and hats and seemed to get short changed as the show must of been canceled as their part in the show seemed a bit rushed. There was a gal in the first six or so episodes that was sort of a main character, but then she departed, then it was nearly a new girl every show with no girl coming on more than two episodes. All the ones featuring the Titanians though had the same girl, her name being Tenko as she worked for the same security force as the main two characters. All in all it was rather fun and the story interesting. I just can not believe Gentaro could never figure out that Goro was Iron King. I mean at one point even the bad guys figured it out.